Getting great flour is not so difficult in this Internet age, but getting flour at a reasonable price is not so easy.
I recently spotted the story of a home baker scaling up – Birch Cottage Bread. An interesting subject for me as my Kenwood mixer bought specially for preparing dough had stopped working, and I was feeling a need to make more bread in less time. I quizzed Lucie about equipment and flour. It is from her I learned that Amazon can be a good source for flour.
There’s lots of flours with all sorts of qualities, but brown breads for me have to be made with stoneground flour. Organic or not? I’m undecided – although I use mostly organic. A favourite is from Waitrose with a great texture and flavour.
There are many craft millers up and down the country who can sell flour on-line but the killer is delivery charges which can add upto 50% on the price. Amazon somehow absorb the delivery costs, and will even provide a discounted price for regular monthly orders.
Bacheldre mill is an example of a miller that delivers to customers via Amazon. With prices around £1 per kilo for 16 kilo bags this beats the best supermarket prices for a similar product but of unknown provenance.
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My target was his 100% Wholemeal Organic Wheat flour, but of course there’s a whole range of flours available. I ended up also with a large bag of his 81% organic flour too which is produced by filtering out some of the bran. I always imagined this was made by adding white flour to the 100% – so this was a learning for me!
The upper picture shows the 100%, while the lower the 81%. If you look closely at any of these flours they have a characteristic texture which I consider ‘oily’ from stonegrinding.
Having baked both flours several times now with conventional yeast for the 100% and using a sourdough starter for the 81% there’s nothing to say against them. A taste test? That’s a bit difficult – none of my subjects can definitively say they prefer this over the other stoneground flours I use.
I recently read a rave review of some organic white flour which made ‘fabulous’ pizza, so I did buy one small bag of Stoates Stoneground Organic Strong White (£2.20 for 1.5kg) – this had a lovely creamy colour. In a Pizza bake-off against Sainsbury Strong White (70pence for 1.5kg) – it was almost indistiguishable, so I’ll be continuing to buy some flour in the supermarket!